U -il M' Hi ii.v ' ! 1 1 I V T II! n: II III l I Ik-,! il. i rain k 1 Urn i mm wrwsmhL ? rjr I 3 "VARNISH DEEP" CLOTHES There are two strides of clothlntr. CLOTH- CRAFT and others, some, merely made to sell. CLOTHCRAFT is made to wear. Good clothes on the surface Is not enough, some good looking furniture for instance is only "varnish deep," you don't know how soon it will go to pieces; Surface Clothes cover a multitude of the tailor's 6ins and the worst of it is, you've lost on the transaction more than you thought you saved. Back of CLOTHCRAFT garments stands a glo rious record, a name that means much to both the maker and the wearer, it means much to us as well, because you will NOT be a one-time customer. It's the coming back again and again that pays us to sell CLOTHCRAFT CLOTHES pays you to wear them too. AH that brains, shears and needle can accom. plish in skilled hands, are made manifest in this splendid make of splendid clothing, that standard by which so many of the "best" makes are measured. Be sure you're safe." If oleomargarine Is Just as good as butter, why buy butter ? "Just as good as CLOTHCRAFT " is the best argument in the world for you to buy CLOTHCRAFT. 1 BING STOKE GOMP'Y REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. AUDITORS' STATEMENT Op the finances ov winslow town ship for the FISCAL YEAR ENDING MARCH 2 1ST, 1!)0). BEN. HACGII, Work Account. DR. By am't dupllcato $J,IH8 81 2,fi48 81 CR. ; Cash rcc'd on duplicate $ 7nl SS By am't turned over to J. A. Llndy : (II By am't exonerations PO 4 By am't double assessed ' . . . . 1-0 By ain't worked by citizens. . 1,5M HH By am't taxes uncollected. .. 140 U0 $2,048 81 Cash Account. DR. By am't cash roc'd on dup'c't 7H 58 , " taxna uncollected.... lt HO " auditors' order US llll Total Debtor (1,046 S4 CU. By iim't receipts H48 :I4 By 267 days' labor ! $i.0u day 63; HO Total Credit $1,182 34 1,010 54 Bnl. due Ben. II.uikIi. 1:15 80 J. A. LINDY, Supervisor. DR. Am't of duplicate t?,t!4il H8 (3,04s 88 CR. Am't wish ree'd on duplicate 1,148 83 Am't worked by citizens 1,141 114 Am't taxes exonerated 80 18 Double assessment 2 85 Am't taxes uncollected 27108 $',048 88 Cash Account. DR. By am't cash ree'd on dup'c't 1,148 8:1 By am't taxes uncollected .. 271 08 $1,419 91 CR. By am't cash receipts 940 46 By am't team work i;i2 57 By days' labor l 00 per day 80100 (1,574 m ' 1.419 91 Bal. due J. A. Llndy.. 154 12 AMOS STROUSE, Collector. CR. Am't carried ovor from last settlement X02 50 Am'tcash duplicate 1,2?2 52 Am't special tax duplicate.. 5,049 71 $7,124 73 CR. Am't paid for orders and In terest 99 59 Am't ret urned to Brookvlllo 52 29 Am't exonerated 217 i Am't collected 3,1)54 IB Am'tcollectors' percentage. . 1H1 9 Am't cash paid to J.M.Norrls 779 97 (5,384 83 Bal. In Collector's hands. 1,740 40 J. M. NORRIS, Account as Treasurer. DR. To bal. from last settlement 103 70 Received from J. B. Sykcs and I). H. Estcs ,. 319 28 Eec'd from Jos. B. Moans. . . . IHli 00 bue'd from Ira .1. Campbell, iluu 00 " J. M. Deemerfor use of election house ' B 00 Ree'd from C. E. fcstrouse for use of election house . . 5 00 Ree'd from Collector Strouse " tint! 87 Kec'd from Col., special tax. S.tMti 45 Kec'd from Collector Strouse H!K) 78 Kec'd from W.D. and J. E. Reynolds 2,214 75 By am t overpaid on orders 7 94 $7,878 77 CR. By am't orders redeemed . . 7,1173 22 " treasurer's percent . 157 41 " expenses to Brook vl 200 $7,832 63 Bal. In Tretis. hands 46 14 Audited March 21, 1900. J. J. HlTTTKH, I J. M. Hutchison, I Auditors. J. L. I' L'dATK, I J. E. WoHELDDKf, Township Clerk. If you have anything to sell, try our Want Column. jyjINNIE N. KECK, NOTARY PUBLIC, RoynoldRville, Pa. pRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. Black and white funeral cars. Mian street ReynoldBVille, Pa. T H. HUGHES, - UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING. The U. B. Burial LeiiRue has been tested and found all right. Cheapest form of In surance. Secure a contract. Near Public fountain, Keynoldsvllle Pa. WINDSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. Between 12th and 13th 8ts on Filbert St. Three minutes walk from the Headlnii Ter m,?ll; I lve minutes walk from the Perm's K. K. Depot. European plan (l.on per day aud upward. American plan (2.90 nor day, Prank M. Scheibley Manager. JJ H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT vine" Gmnt aD1 F'f,n "U" Kcyn"lus- JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINE ER , Surveyor and Drauphtsman. office In Syn dlcate building:, Main street. JJISSOLUTION NOTICE. Notice Is hereby Riven that the partner ship heretofore existing between N. A. Head ley and L. A. Mcrlca, under the Arm namo of Headley & Merlca, has this day been dissolv ed by mutual consent, Mr. Itferlca retiring. ThoTiustness will hereafter be conducted by N. A. Headley to whom all bills owlnir tb said Arm are due and payable, and all de mands are to be presented to him for nay. ment- N. A. Hkapi.ky, u u .. . L. A. Mkuica. Keynoldsvllle, March 26, luce. 1 Leech's s Planing Mill 5 West Reynoldsville Window Sash, Doors, Frames, Flooring, STAIR WORK Rough and Dressed Lumber, Contract and repair work given m prompt attention. Give ub your order. My prices are reasonable. W. A. LEECH, Proprietor.. IXr . A TWT m n t a n 1 Hi d GIRLS TO LEARN WINDING AND QUIL LING. GOOD WAGES PAID. ::::::: THE ENTERPRISE SILK fOMPAMV J FKEE ANTITOXIN HEADSJFF- DEATH a Lust Four Months Every Diph theria Patient Troated Promptly and According; to Health Com missioner's Instructions Has Recovered. URGES EARLY DOSAQE Dr. Dixon Scorer a Notable Life-Saving Triumph Among the Poor of Penn sylvania Hopes For Still Better Record. The Health Commissioner, Samuel Q. Dixon, a couple of months ago an nounced that use of free antitoxin among diphtheria victims who were too poor to pay lor the serum had reduced the death rate to 8.8 per cent. This was a splendid result and ahowe'd the great buuelits of the State paying for antitoxin for those who might other wise not be able to procure It and In conseuu-.'nee probably die. Now Health Commissioner Dixon announces that according to the rec ords compiled In his otllce he finds that during the four months of Novem ber and December, 1905, and January and February, 1906, there has not been a single death from diphtheria where the free use f antitoxin provided by the State has been used within 24 hours nrtcr the onset of the disease and in doses recommended In circulars gent out by the Commissioner. Dr. Dixon attached great Import ance to tills fact, and hopes that the same results will be secured In a far larger number of cases by physicians throughout the State using free' anti toxin more promptly. Tills prompt use of antitoxin has been urged by Health Commissioner Dixon ii'om the start of the free dis tribution. He has urged It In his cor respondence with fellow-medical men and the local HoiirdB of Health throughout the State, and especially in 'he circular which is coutalned In every package of the State's free anti toxin. "The early use of antitoxin Is es nential," says Health Commissioner Dixon In this circular, and he endeav ors to impress It upon the people by heavily underscoring the words of ad vice. In this circular also Dr. Dixon has given general directions for the ad ministration of antitoxin In both cura tive and immunizing doses that have been found exceedingly helpful to phy sicians in Pennsylvania. Never less than 3000 units, says Dr. Dixon, should be used for a curative dose; In ad vanced oases he says to Increase the Initial curative dose from 3000 to 6000 units. If Improvement Is not manifested within six hours following the Initial dose, give 6000 units, and if no benefit Is to be observed within the following eight to 12 hours, repeat the same un til a change for the better can be no ticed. All cases showing croutiy symptoms Rhould reclve large and often-repeated doses. The Cure that Cures Coughs, Colds Whooplnd Cough, Asthma' i Bronohltla and Incipient) Consumption Is o kSoi Aruoste. 2550el For sale by Stoko & Folcht Druff Co, Sanitary Plumbing Steam and Gas Fitting and all kinds of work in that line. We handle Munifes, Globes, Burners, Chan deliers, Etc. Located In the Stoke building on Fifth street. 3. J. BURG00N AND 80N Sanitary Plumbers REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. J.. A SILLY TOY. Thr War -he Toothhrnnh Wll at First Reftarded. Colonial liurivs nnil letters multe it plain thnl our unfortunate ancestors Buffered much from jumping tooth miles, swelled faces uitil the early Iobs or forcible extraction of teeth which at a Inter period might lmve been saved li render their owners many years of ftn lhcr service. No icomlor, since the care of the leeth was lilllc understood, ami that little often but negligently piactii cd. Toothpicks were known; the tooth brush watt not. although rough substi tutes were employed, made of llutten ed st: Us, split ami poiimiod at one end to a stiff, librotts fringe. Toothbrushes when first introduced were regarded its by no menus Important accessories to the toilet, but rather as minor lux uries mid stiltnblo for women only. The diary of a London merchant trading to the colonics lias litis entry: "Untight a Toothbrush for my wife, wheh, used together with sn!te water, very strong, and a. wnsslie of Herbs, alio Is told will keep her Teethe from falling out or getting liollowe. The Ktilte and Ilerbes may well prove strengthening to her (iunintes well, are lender, but for the brush It seeiues but a silly Toy, hardly like to ware the worth of Its price and scarce clenu ley save when new. But she must have It, being a new thing Into from France." In the famous collection of the let ters of the Verney family, as well, the toothbrush Is referred to n. "an ele gant trifle, now used by the ladies of rarls." Hut when Sally Aunls, a colonial belle, wrote of It to her sister she had, lihe the Loudon merchant's wife, good aKi of Its proving of more than trilling value. Her seafaring father hail Jtl.it brought her one, along with other gifts. "Besides these, and ye smnlle conilie, be brt. me a new mouth-brush made of eyvory," she wrote, "the buck: parte Inlaycd very pretty with sliver: i.nd ye brUslea long nntl stilTe and sett very linne: web he Is assured will help me of my Tooth Akes: well, yon will irncss deer .Ittdy I do pray It may." Youth's Companion. FOR THE HOUSEWIFE. Melted butter will not make a good cake. Veal should be white, dry and close grained. The colder eggs are the quicker they will froth. To make good pastry the Ingredients must be lee cold. Nutmegs should be grated at the blossom end first. A brush dipped in salt water should be used in cleaning bamboo furniture. tiood macaroni Is of a yellowish tint, does not break readily in cooking and swells to two or three times Its bulk. A simple and very efficient disinfect ant to pour down a sink is a small quantity of charcoal mixed with wa ter. Warm bread and cake should be cut with a knife the blade of which has been heated by standing It In boiling water. Mica Mlnlnst. Mica mining Is one of the greatest Industries in North Carolina. Mica is found in all sorts of blocks of various thicknesses and shapes and can be split it ml respllt almost ad Infinitum or until H becomes the thin, flexible wafer of commerce. The material Is by nature imbedded or scattered through the feld spar In masses large or small, close to gether or far apart, and Is blasted from the rocks by means of dynamite, the purer veins being found between walls of slate. From the mines It is taken to the shops, where it Is split into thin sheets, trimmed Into regular forms and made ready for the market, the price varying with the size and color of the sheets. The average size Is about 4 by 0, though rare sheet of 24 by 18 inches are sometimes found. Knimlcoirn llnd HnmlTvrltliiH'. M. Iloussnye attributes the muddle over orders at Waterloo to Napoleon's execrable handwriting. This was the opinion of the writing master of Alex andre Dumas: "The emperor never lost a battle except by his bad writing. Ills officers could never make out what he meant. Bemember this, Alexandre, aud thake your down strokes heavy and your up strokes light." Grouchy declares that during the battle of Wa terloo he could not make out whether Napoleon wrote "batallle gagnee" or "batallle engagee," and he coujectural ly read "battle gained." Andrew Lang In London Post. The Freak of Fate. Here is a unique memorial notice from a Georgia exchange: "Once he was nearly swallowed by an earthquake and shortly afterward was blown nearly a quarter of a mile by a hurricane, but he triumphed over all those afflictions, only to be kicked out of life by a mule thnt had a mort gage on It and was blind In one eye." Atlanta Constitution. Other ObJectlnitH. "Gladly would I die for you!" Her look of hauteur was maintained despite this plea. "You are in error," she replied coldly, "If you think the color of your hair constitutes my chief objection to you." The good night was brief and soon. Philadelphia Ledger. A Mia- Difference. ' Rlio TTnw much fin vmi onrn n vsinp? ne-About $2,000. "But we can't live on that!" "You asked me bow much I earned. I make about $20,000." Life. INDIGESTION'S RECORJ) "The best remedy I can prescribe for your In digestion, madam, is Green's August Flower. I know of several other physicians who pre scribe it regularly." JIndigrstlon is making au awful record as a cause of sudden deaths. It is beat ing heart-failure in its ghastly harvest. tJYou read in the papers daily of appar ently healthy and even robust men being suddenly attacked with acute indigestion after enjoying a hearty meal, and of their dying in many cases before a physician could be called in. tJThis should be a warning to yott who suffer with regular or periodical attacks of indigestion. If these unfortunate vic tims of acute indigestion had taken a small dose of Green's August Flower be fore or after their meals they would not have fallen a prey to such sudden seizures. tfAugust Flower prevents indigestion by creatinggood digestion. It also regulates the liver, purifies the blood and tones up the entire system in a natural way. t tJTwo sizes, jsc and 75c. All druggists. For sale by Stoke & Feicht Drug Co. HENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JAN. 1. lilOfi. TRAINS LKAVE REYNOLDSVILLE ! For New Rnihlclioni, Red Bunk, and prin cipal Intermedium stations. Oil C'lly llnd I'll isbmi.., saw a. m, 1:2!, 5:07, 7:SS (New Bctlilclicni only) p. 111. week-days. Sundays B:M0 a, m., 4:20 11. in. Kor I)ii hols, briftwood, and principal Inter mediate stations. IliirrWlniri;, I'liiladclnlila. Kalllniore and Washington, i:il!l a, in., '-'.:!i tt:2. p ni. week-days. HundayH V2::iU p. 111. Kor HiiHols only 11:42 a. m. week-days, DiSO p. 111. dally. W. W. Attrimwiiy, .1. R. Woon, Gen. Manager. Passenger Tralllc Mj;r. lino. W. Hovu, General I'asNeiiKcr Agent. Wedding Invitations and Visit ing Cards neatly and prompt ly printed at The Star office, ajxrcrrn-ssanirjirn li it-rtfr r-pr rrrr PURE FOODS Many states have passed laws prohib iting the sale of sea foods that, have been treated by preservatives, nu'esx so labeled. The above trade mark Is a guarantee that the oysters or other sea foods bearing It tire absolutely pure and free from pre servatives of any kind. Sealshlpt Oysters are free from water, from Ice, from germs, from dirts. They are sealed In air-tight cases at the beds and opened at the dealer's. The ice Is packed around the case. FRESH SHIPMENTS DAILY AT Frank's Restaurant. .lairirrrrtr Special 15 Days' Sale. "1 rom ALL GOODS REDUCED from 15 to 35 per cent. Special on Winter Overcoats and Suits for Men and Boys. DRESS GOODS which sold for $1.00 now goes at 75c. Dress Goods, was 75c, now 50c. Meltons, were $1.00, now 75c. , LADIES' COATS which were sold for $10, $12 and $15, you get for $5, $6 and 7.00. FURS I have a few yet, not many.'v One-third and one-half off. $4.50 Furg now $2.50. LEGGINS-50c kind now 39c. FASCINATORS In black and white, were 50c, will go at 39c. 10c Ladies' Hose for 9c or 3 for 25c. 25c Ladies' Hose for 21c. Boys' Fleeced Undershirt and Drawers 25c, none better at 40c. Fleisher Yarn 98c a pound. ' Come and see foi yourself. N.HANATJ 330,000.00 STEEL PLANXGOLD BONDS First Mortgage. Six Per Cent Bonds. Payable in Gold. Dated Dec. 1, 1905. Interest payable June I, Dec. 1. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Reynoldsville, Pa. PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK, Reynoldsville, Pa. AND C. F. DICKINSON, Westinghouse Building, Pittsburg, Pa. We own and offer (in amounts to suit purchasers) the best industrial security ever offered to the investors of this community. The controlling interest in Reynoldsville's new "STEEL PLANT" has recently been purchased by Pittsburg people who are old in the successful management of large iron and steel properties. Necessary additions are being made to the equipment, and new and heavy machinery is being added. Upon completion of these improvements a full line of Alligator Shears, Cold Saws, Rolling-Mill and Contractors' Machinery will be extensively manufactured at the Company's works, and sold from their Pittsburg offices. The assets of the Company as re-equipped will stand at $120,000.00 in round figures, against which the $30,000.00 of First Mortgage bonds are the first and prior lien. The Company has issued $30,000.00 six per cent First Mortgage Gold Bonds in de nomination of $100.00, $200.00, $500.00 and $1,000.00 each and we, the undersigned, have purchased a very large proportion of the entire issue. The semi-annual interest, at the rate of six per centum, is payable on June 1st and De cember 1st of each year, at The Peoples National Bank, Reynoldsville, Pa. These bonds are a first and prior lien on all of the real estate, buildings, machinery, equipments, franchises, property and revenues of the American Production Company, and a special condition in the mortgage provides that bonds to the amount of $2,500.00 shall be retired every year, after the first two years. - LEGALITY .These bonds have been issued under the supervision and advice of the following attor neys, viz : Messrs. Charles Corbett, of Brookville, Pa., Weil & Thorp, of-Pittsburg, Pa., and G. M. McDonald, of Reynoldsville, Pa.; any of whom can vouch for the binding val idity of these securities. The undersigned being personally acquainted with the "STEEL PLANT" property, consider these bonds as the best of the kind ever offered in this community, and recom mend them as a safe investment. Prompt subscriptions for bonds in amounts from $100.00 up will be received by the un dersigned at the price of par and accrued interest. Allotments will be made as subscrip tions are received, the right being reserved to cease the allotment at any time. : A DDR ESS: The Peoples National Bank, The First National Bank, By W. B. ALEXANDER, President. By JOHN H. KAUCHER, President, Reynoldsville, Pa. Reynoldsville, Pa. OR C. F. Dickinson, 1218-19-20 Westinghouse Building, Pittsburg, Pa. ! 't SO